Infrastructure security in Elastic Beanstalk
As a managed service, Amazon Elastic Beanstalk is protected by the Amazon global network security
procedures that are described in our
Best Practices for Security, Identity, and Compliance
You use Amazon published API calls to access Elastic Beanstalk through the network. Clients must support Transport Layer Security (TLS) 1.2 or later. Clients must also support cipher suites with perfect forward secrecy (PFS), such as Ephemeral Diffie-Hellman (DHE) or Elliptic Curve Ephemeral Diffie-Hellman (ECDHE). Most modern platforms support these modes.
Additionally, requests must be signed by using an access key ID and a secret access key that is associated with an IAM principal. Or you can use the Amazon Security Token Service (Amazon STS) to generate temporary security credentials to sign requests.
For other Elastic Beanstalk security topics, see Amazon Elastic Beanstalk security.